President Cyril Ramaphosa on Wednesday received the final part of the State Capture report. The much anticipated ceremony took place at the Union Buildings after several postponements.
Image: President Cyril Ramaphosa loves Ankole cattle.
Just as he was about to receive the report, President Cyril Ramaphosa flashed his IPad and Mzansi could not help noticing what was on the Screensaver. A picture of Ankoles! Ramaphosa seems to be so in love with his beasts he even use them as a screensaver. We usually upload pictures of things very close to our hearts on our phone and devices screens. Your President is smitten by his Ankoles. Who would blame him, those beasts have made him the billionaire that he is today. If he could sell Ankole for over R4 million in one day, what’s not there to love about them? Last year, Patrice Motsepe paid Ramaphisa R4,7 million for four Ankole female cows. The most expensive of the lot cost him R2,1 million.
@KabeloD So Cyril Ramaphosa is now bragging about his farm, he even put it as a profile and pointed the iPad to the cameras mxm, this one wants to kill the ‘Mgodoyi’ gang with envy.
@slindileSli Ramaphosa doesn’t care what people say. He even flashed his screen for everyone to see his darling Ankoles. Say what you wanna say.
It looks like in President Cyril Ramaphosa’s world, being president of South Africa is just a side hustle, the real job in being President of the Ankole Association. Nothing will come between him and his beloved cows. Ramaphosa’s foray into Ankole breeding began back in 2004 when he travelled to Uganda to meet with President Yoweri Museveni. Due to disease control measures enforced by the Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, Ramaphosa used artificial insemination technology and embryo quarantine processes to buy and import 43 Ankole cows from Museveni. Since then, he has never looked back!
Meanwhile, as he handed over the final report of the commission of inquiry to president Cyril Ramaphosa, an emotional Chief Justice Raymond Zondo said the commission of inquiry into state capture could not look at every single allegation as that would take a decade. Asked if he has any regrets while heading the commission. Zondo says looking back at decisions he has taken he struggles to find any bad decisions that he took. He says he will take the same decisions. Zondo said: “I have no regrets.”